Title: DKA
1DKA
2Pathogenesis 1
- Lack of insulin production prevents glucose
uptake by muscle and allows unrestrained hepatic
glucose production. - Lack of suppression of lipolysis leads to excess
circulating FFAs which are converted into
ketoacids (B-OH-butyrate and acetoacetate) by the
liver.
3Pathogenesis 2
- This leads to acidemia which may impair vascular
tone and cardiac function. - Marked hyperglycemia and ketonemia cause osmotic
diuresis with loss of water and electrolytes.
4History 1
- Nausea, emesis
- Abdominal pain (2/2 delayed gastric
emptying/ileus 2/2 acidosis and lyte
abnormalities and may correlate with degree of
acidosis) - Polyuria/Polydipsia
- Lethargy
- Headache
- Anorexia
- Usually develop over 24h or less in DKA over
multiple days more insidiously in HHS.
5History 2
- Possible precipitating events (Is)
- Infection (UTI? PNA?)
- Insulin (incorrect dosing/noncompliance)
- Ischemia (myocardial.mesenteric)
- Initial presentation of DM.
6History 3
- More uncommon causes
- Med effect meds that affect carb metabolism
- Steroids
- High-dose thiazides
- Atypical antipsychotics
- CVA
- Pancreatitis
- Cocaine use
7DKA can develop after admission for something
else
- In hospitalized pts without DKA who present with
CVA, MI, or infection and glucose gt250 - Maintain high suspicion for DKA check RFP for
AG and serum/urine ketones.
8Physical 1
- ABCs
- Mental status
- Evidence of intercurrent illness (infection, MI,
CVA, pancreatitis) - Abdominal exam TTP, hypoactive BS
- Volume status
- Skin turgor
- Mucosa
- Flat neck veins
- Orthostatic hypotension
9Labs/Imaging
- RFP for lytes, glc, CALCULATE AG
- CBC
- UA/ketones
- Plasma osmolality
- Serum ketones if urine ketones are present
(B-OH-Butyrate, Acetone, Acetaoacetate) - ABG if serum HCO3 reduced
- ECG
- Consider infectious w/u(blood, urine, sputum,
CXR) - HbA1C may be useful
10Diagnosis
DKA DKA DKA HHS
Mild Mod Severe HHS
Plasma Glc gt250 gt250 gt250 gt600
Arterial pH 7.25-7.30 7.0-7.24 lt7.0 gt7.30
HCO3 15-18 10-lt15 lt10 gt18
Urine ketones Small
Serum osm Variable Variable Variable gt320
Anion Gap gt10 gt12 gt12 Variable
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12DKA Lactic Acidosis Uremia ETOH Keto- acidosis ASA Intox MeOH/ Ethy Glycol Intox
pH Low Low Mild Low ? ? Low
Plasma Glc High Normal Normal Low/Nl Nl/Low Nl
Glycosuria High Negative Neg Neg Neg Neg
Plasma Ketones High Normal Normal Sm-Mod Normal Normal
Anion Gap High High Sl High High High High
Osmolality High Normal High Normal Normal High
Uric Acid High Normal Normal High Normal Normal
13- B-OH-Butyrate ? Acetone Acetoacetate
- Direct measurement of B-OH-Butyrate is preferable
for monitoring degree of ketonemia and is
available at UHCMC (not VA) - Standard ketones may become increasingly positive
as conversion from B-OH-Butyrate to
acetone/acetoacetate occurs
14Switching gears to an Acid-Base talk
- 5 Step Approach to ABGs without memorizing
formulas.
15- Identify alkalosis/acidosis by pH change from
7.4. (gt7.4 alkalosis. lt7.4 acidosis). - Determine if primary disorder is respiratory or
metabolic based on direction of change of PCO2. - If pH and PCO2 change in same direction -
metabolic - If pH and PCO2 change in opposite direction -
respiratory
16- 3. Check compensation to identify other primary
disorders. - Metabolic Acidosis - Check Resp Compensation.
- PCO2 (1.5 HCO3-) 8 2
- Simplified For every 1 mEq decrease in HCO3,
PCO2 should decrease by 1.2 mmHg. - Example If HCO3 is 9...24-9 15. PCO2
reduction should be 15x1.2 18. 40-18
22mmHg. - Metabolic Alkalosis Check Resp
Compensation. - PCO2 rises 0.7mmHg for each 1.0 mEq rise in
HCO3. - Example If HCO3 is 34...34-24 10. 10 x 0.7
7. 407 47mmHg.
17- Acute Respiratory Acidosis
- Every 10 mmHg rise in PCO2 1 meq rise in HCO3
- Chronic Respiratory Acidosis
- For every 10 mmHg rise in PCO2 3.5 mEq rise
in HCO3
18- Acute Respiratory Alkalosis
- Every 10 mmHg drop in PCO2 2 meq drop in HCO3
- Chronic Respiratory Alkalosis
- For every 10 mmHg drop in PCO2 5 mEq drop
in HCO3
19- 4. If metabolic acidosis - calculate anion gap.
- Na - (ClHCO3)
- Normal gap 12 or less.
- For each gram of albumin drop less than 4 add
2.5 to calculated gap to get actual gap. - Example Calculated gap 9. Albumin 2. Add 5 to
gap 14.
20- 5. If AGMA - calculate delta gap.
- Change in gap divided by change in
bicarbonate. - (AG-12) / (24-HCO3)
- lt1 AGMA NAGMA
- 1-2 - Pure AGMA
- gt2 AGMA Metabolic Alkalosis
21- In DKA, initially AGMA as treatment proceeds
many will develop a subsequent NAGMA. - Ketoacid anions are excreted in the urine with
sodium which would have been used to reproduce
HCO3 in the kidney ? loss of potential HCO3
which is equivalent to actual bicarb loss ?
subsequent NAGMA.
22Serial Monitoring
- Q1H POCT Glucose until stable
- RFP/Serum osmolality q2-4h with close FU of HCO3.
- Consider VBG rather than frequent ABGs for pt and
intern comfort venous pH is about 0.03 units
lower than ABG.
23DKATx
24HHS Tx
25Fluids, fluids, fluids.
- Severe Hypovolemia NS 1000cc/h
- Milder Dehydration evaluate corrected Na
(Corrected Na Measured Na (Glc-100/100) - Hyponatremia 250-500cc/h NS
- Normal-Hypernatremia 250-500c/h 1/2NS
- When serum glc reaches 200 (or 300 in HHS) ?
Change to D51/2NS 150-250cc/h
26Insulin therapy 1
- Usually IV route except in mild DKA.
- IV Regular insulin 0.1U/kg bolus then 0.1U/kg/h
continuous infusion OR no bolus with infusion
rate alone at 0.14U/kg/h - SQ Lispro 0.3U/kg x1 then 0.2U/kg in 1hr then
0.2U/kg SQ q2h. - If serum glc doesnt fall by 50-70 mg/dL in 1st
hour double the IV or SQ dose. - K lt3.3 is a CONTRAINDICATION to insulin.
27Insulin therapy 2
- When glc to 200 (in DKA) or 250-300 (in HHS)
reduce infusion to 0.02-0.05U/kg/h IV or change
SQ dosing to 0.1U/kg q2h with goal glc 150-200. - Never discontinue insulin prior to closure of
anion gap!
28Potassium therapy
- If K lt3.3 hold insulin therapy and replete K
with fluids 40-60mEq/h to ½NS until K 3.3
(assuming UOP 50cc/h). - If K gt5.3 no K supplementation but check q2h.
- 3.3-5.3 Give 20-30mEq per liter of 1/2NS goal K
4-5 (assuming UOP 50cc/h). - Substantial losses in almost all 2/2 urine loss
shifts out of cells 2/2 insulin deficiency and
hyperosmolality so K artifically elevated at
presentation.
29Phosphate?
- Whole body PO4 depletion is common though PO4
will be normal or elevated initially due to
migration out of cells. - With treatment hypophosphatemia will develop
usually without adverse effects in a self-ltd
fashion. - No benefit to repleting PO4 unless cardiac
dysfx/hemolytic anemia/resp depression,
concentration lt1.
30Assess need for HCO3
- pH lt6.9 ? Consider HCO3 gtt (though small studies
have shown minimal benefit) - pH gt7.0 ? No HCO3
31Resolution
- Ketoacidosis resolved AG is normal (lt12)
- Ketonemia/Ketonuria may persist gt36h without pt
actually being in true ketoacidosis. - HHS pts are mentally alert and plasma osmolality
is lt315. - Pt is able to tolerate PO.
32What to do with the insulin gtt when gap has
closed
- Initiate SQ insulin AT MEALTIME with a 1-2h taper
of the gtt. - Insulin Naïve ? 0.5-0.8U/kg per day in sliding
scale long-acting regimen - 25 as long acting.
- 25 as scheduled meal-time insulin
- Sliding Scale
- Known DM ? start at previous insulin regimen.
33Potential Complications 1
- Cerebral edema
- Very rare in adults but 40 mortality.
- Sxs ha, lethargy, decreased arousal ? seizures,
incontinence, brady, resp arrest, pupul changes. - Mortality 20-40.
- Prevented by following protocol, adding dextrose
to fluids when appropriate. - Tx unit, mannitol?, 3NS?
34Potential Complications 2
- Non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema
- Hypoxemia 2/2 decreased osmotic pressure ?
migration of fluid into lungs. - If initial A-a gradient is widened on ABG, higher
risk of development of pulmonary edema.
35- A 23-year-old woman with type 1 diabetes mellitus
is admitted to the hospital with a diagnosis of
community-acquired pneumonia and lethargy. Before
admission, her insulin pump therapy was
discontinued because of confused mentation. - On physical examination, temperature is 37.5
C (99.5 F), blood pressure is 108/70 mm Hg,
pulse rate is 100/min, and respiration rate is 24
min. There are decreased breath sounds in the
posterior right lower lung. Neurologic
examination reveals altered consciousness.
36- Sodium 130 meq/L (130 mmol/L)
- Potassium 5.0 meq/L (5.0 mmol/L)
- Chloride 100 meq/L (100 mmol/L)
- Bicarbonate 16 meq/L (16 mmol/L)
- Blood urea nitrogen 38 mg/dL (13.6 mmol/L)
- Creatinine 1.4 mg/dL (123.8 µmol/L
- Glucose 262 mg/dL (14.5 mmol/L)
- Urine ketones Positive
37- Which of the following is the most appropriate
next step in management? - A Add insulin glargine
- B Add neutral protamine Hagedorn (NPH)
insulin - C Implement a sliding scale for regular
insulin - D Start an insulin drip
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